Psykosonik
Psykosonik | |
---|---|
Origin | Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA |
Genres | Techno |
Years active | 1992–1997 |
Labels | Exit Records (Dietrich Dexter), Wax Trax! Records |
Past members | Paul Sebastien, Daniel Lenz, Theodore Beale, Michael Larson |
Psykosonik was an American techno music group.[1] The band had four Billboard charted Top 40 hit singles on the Dance Club Songs chart.[1] Psykosonik was featured on the Mortal Kombat: Annihilation soundtrack.[2]
The band's lyrics include cyberpunk and extropian themes that allude to virtual reality, AI, cybernetics, life extension, and general science.[3]
History
Psykosonik included musicians Paul Sebastian, Theodore Beale, Daniel Lenz and Michael Larson.[4] In 1987 Theodore Beale was playing in a cover band called NoBoys. He first met Paul Sebastian at The Underground in Minneapolis and the two men put together a band with Beale on keyboards and Sebastian on guitar and vocals. They found a drummer Michael Larson and a production engineer Daniel Lenz. The band Psykosonik began recording electronic music at Sebastian's apartment where he had a recording studio, and later found performance opportunities in local clubs including First Avenue, 7th Street Entry, and Glam Slam. Their first successful song was "Sex Me Up", which they used as a demo to sign with Wax Trax! Records and TVT Records.[5]
Their first album, Psykosonik, was released in 1993.[6] Their second album, Unlearn, was released in 1995.[6] The hit singles from these albums included "Silicon Jesus" in September 1993, "Welcome to My Mind" in February 1994, "Unlearn" (1995) and "It Has Begun" (1996).[7] The members also appeared in video productions.[8]The band's third album was titled Spiritual Machine.[9] It was completed by 1997 but was never released by the band's label, Wax Trax! Records, which was at this time owned by TVT Records. Because of disagreements with their label, Psykosonik then disbanded.[9]
Daniel Lenz went on to produce a single album with vocalist Brent Daniels titled Searching for the End under the band name Hednoize.[10] In 2001 Lenz launched a short lived project called PsykoHed on MP3.com. He released his debut solo album, Stuck in a Dream, in 2008, featuring guest appearances by Brent Daniels, as well as Paul Sebastien of Psykosonik.[11]
In 2004, Paul Sebastien teamed up with Caesar Filori to release two singles under the name Basic Pleasure Model, titled Sunyata and How to Live.[12] Larson went on to become the audio director for Epic Games and produced the soundtracks for the Gears of War series.[13] Beale, also known as Vox Day, left the field of music and later established video game and publishing companies.[14]
Personnel
- Paul Sebastien (1992–1997) – vocals, composition, engineering, lyrics, mixing, production
- Daniel Lenz (1992–1997) – composition, engineering, lyrics, mixing, production
- Theodore Beale (1992–1994) – composition, lyrics
- Michael Larson (1992–1994) – samples, percussion[4]
Discography
Albums
Title | Release date | Label |
---|---|---|
Psykosonik | US: 1993-02-02 Japan: 1993-11-01 |
US: Wax Trax!/TVT Japan: Polystar |
Unlearn | 1995-11-06 | Wax Trax!/TVT |
Spiritual Machine | Unreleased | Wax Trax!/TVT |
Singles
Song | Release date | Chart peak | Weeks in chart | Album | Formats | Label |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"Silicon Jesus" | 1993-05-25 | 37 (Dance Club Songs) | 5 | Psykosonik | Released as four-track vinyl and six-track CD. | Wax Trax!/TVT |
"Welcome To My Mind" | 1993-11-23 | 26 (Dance Club Songs) | 10 | Psykosonik | Released as five-track vinyl and seven-track CD. | Wax Trax!/TVT |
"Unlearn" | 1995-08-08 | 11 (Dance Club Songs) | 11 | Unlearn | Released as five-track vinyl and ten-track CD. | Wax Trax!/TVT |
"Panik Kontrol (PQM's Deephead Pass)" | Unknown | Mortal Kombat: Annihilation soundtrack | Released only as a white label promo. | Wax Trax!/TVT |
Movie and Game Soundtracks
Song | Release date | Title |
---|---|---|
Various | 1993 | X-Kaliber 2097|Activision |
Various | 1994 | CyClones|Strategic Simulations, Inc. |
"Unlearn (Josh Wink's Live Mix)" | 1995 | Mortal Kombat |
"Theme" | 1995 | Marathon 2: Durandal |
"Theme" | 1996 | Marathon Infinity |
"It Has Begun" | 1996 | Mortal Kombat: More Kombat |
"Need to Die" | 1997 | Organ Donors, Freestyle Motocross |
"Panik Kontrol" | 1997 | Mortal Kombat: Annihilation |
See also
References
- 1 2 "Psykosonik". Billboard.
- ↑ "Psykosonik Chart History". Billboard. October 25, 1997. p. 16.
- ↑ Psykosonik Lyrics, retrieved 23 June 2016
- 1 2 Psykosonik, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ "The true and obscure history of Psykosonik". Retrieved 14 Jan 2016.
- 1 2 Psykosonik, AllMusic, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ Psykosonik, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ Vox Day wrote lyrics for an early-nineties industrial dance band. They’re just awful, 13 April 2015, retrieved 23 June 2016
- 1 2 Psykosonik, retrieved 23 June 2013
- ↑ Hednoize, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ Daniel Lenz – Stuck In A Dream, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ Paul Sabastien, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ Walden, Jennifer (March 2013), Audio for Games, retrieved 23 June 2016
- ↑ Right-Wing Trolls Hijack SciFi Oscars, 12 April 2015, retrieved 23 June 2016
External links
- Psykosonik at Discogs
- Psykosonik at Last.fm
- Psykosonik discography at MusicBrainz
- Daniel Lenz on Myspace
- Paul Sebastian on Myspace
- Basic Pleasure Model on Myspace
- Blackbox Psykosonik "Welcome To My Mind" from YouTube